You open your credit card statement, and something doesn’t look right.
- There’s a charge you don’t recognize
- You were charged for a product you never received
- Your payment was not credited
That sudden sinking feeling sets in. You feel your only option is to call the merchant, cross your fingers, and hope for the best. But federal law gives you more power than that.
What Is the Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA)?
The Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA) is a federal law that gives consumers a formal process to challenge billing errors on credit card accounts. It also requires credit card companies to take those disputes seriously and investigate them within set time limits.
Before the FCBA, consumers were largely at the mercy of financial institutions that controlled both the investigation and the outcome of any dispute. The law was designed to change that dynamic.
What Kinds of Errors Does the FCBA Cover?
More than most people expect. The FCBA is not limited to outright fraud. It also covers:
- Charges for goods or services you never received
- Duplicate charges
- Mathematical errors
- Payments that were never properly credited
- Transactions listed with wrong dates or amounts
- In some cases, charges for defective goods or services
If something on your statement does not match what you bought or agreed to pay, the FCBA may give you a path to challenge it.
How Does the Dispute Process Work?
If you spot an error, time matters. You generally have 60 days from the date the statement was mailed to submit a written dispute. A phone call is a good first step, but it typically does not fully preserve your rights under the law. You need to send written notice to the billing inquiry address listed by your creditor.
Once your dispute is received, the creditor must:
- Acknowledge it within 30 days
- Resolve or investigate it within two billing cycles (no more than 90 days)
- Refrain from treating the disputed amount as delinquent during the investigation
- Refrain from reporting the disputed amount to credit bureaus as unpaid
These rules exist so that you cannot be pressured into paying a questionable charge just to protect your credit.
What Happens if the Merchant Won’t Budge?
The FCBA becomes especially useful when a merchant refuses to take responsibility. If you ordered an appliance that never arrived or paid for a service that was canceled without a refund, you may find yourself stuck between a merchant and a credit card company, each pointing at the other.
In certain circumstances, the FCBA lets you assert claims directly against the card issuer based on problems with the underlying transaction. That can give you real leverage when a merchant is unresponsive.
What if Creditors Break the Rules?
Not every credit card company follows the law. Some fail to conduct proper investigations. Others continue collection efforts while a dispute is pending or report the disputed amount to credit bureaus as if it were settled.
When that happens, you may have legal remedies. Depending on the circumstances, a creditor’s failure to comply with the FCBA can result in liability for damages, attorney’s fees, and other relief under federal law.
What You Should Do Right Now
If you have spotted an error on your statement, a few steps can make a real difference:
- Document everything. Save statements, receipts, and any correspondence with the merchant.
- Act quickly. The 60-day window moves fast.
- Put it in writing. Send your dispute to the correct billing inquiry address, not just a general customer service line.
- Know your rights. A creditor that ignores or mishandles your dispute may owe you more than just a correction.
How Can 360 Consumer Law Help?
At 360 Consumer Law, we help consumers fight back against billing errors, inaccurate credit reporting, identity theft, and other unfair financial practices. When creditors fail to follow the law, you have rights. We help you use them.
Contact 360 Consumer Law and we will help right that wrong
Righting a wrong!


